JoeTheJuggler
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2006
- Messages
- 27,766
A specific type of ammo could be prohibited -but all types of ammo could not.
De acuerdo.
A specific type of ammo could be prohibited -but all types of ammo could not.
Well, Chicago has tried strict control and illegal repression of gun ownership, and it's failed miserably.
It bugs me rather a lot how few murders ever get closed.
I can't get behind the rationale for gun control laws by limiting the guns. James Holmes would have found another way to have accomplished his goal if he hadn't gotten guns. He may have even killed more people by using a fatal gas and barring the doors. Burning the theater down, or bombing the place. He would have found a way to do it.
Note (also might fall into the "random trivia" thread): Reagan was shot with an explosive bullet. Hinckley's gun was loaded with exploding-head Devastator rounds. None functioned as designed, except the one that hit a building across the street.
There were 31,000 gun deaths in the U.S. in 2010.
When the number of fatal gas killings or burning or bombing deaths gets somewhere close to that figure, we can take on those issues.
ETA: Isn't your argument rather like saying we ought not fight wildfires because forests can similarly be damaged by large meteorites?
Oliver, It would also be fairly easy to require taggants in the bullet metal. Then you could know which case-lot the bullets came from, for example.
I had some gun collector try to tell me that taggants would make bullets less safe, but I couldn't get a understandable answer as to why.
Anybody here heard a reason for that?
It bugs me rather a lot how few murders ever get closed. The death rate on the streets of Chicago is hideous.
30% only!
I don't understand what problem the OP is trying to solve. 50 rounds, which is a single box, is enough to commit atrocities.
Meanwhile, I buy in lots in multiples of 1000, and I am a very modest consumer in my circle (competitive shooting). Any proposed solution would destroy my sport and do nothing to prevent mass murder.
If we were fighting wildfires in places that were repeatedly getting hit with meteorites I'd consider that stupid and illogical.
The point I'm making is that gun control can be tightened but that isn't going to stop a lot of these mass killings. The perpetrators will just find new ways to do it.
I don't understand what problem the OP is trying to solve. 50 rounds, which is a single box, is enough to commit atrocities.
Meanwhile, I buy in lots in multiples of 1000, and I am a very modest consumer in my circle (competitive shooting). Any proposed solution would destroy my sport and do nothing to prevent mass murder.
I suspect that is the actual goal for many. They WANT to make people like...well, us (recreational shooters) into criminals and/or simply make it impossible for us to shoot.
I suspect that is the actual goal for many. They WANT to make people like...well, us (recreational shooters) into criminals and/or simply make it impossible for us to shoot.
I get that, I was just addressing how s/he thought it would actually work in practice.I think the primary thing the OP is doing is based on a misunderstanding of 2nd Amendment jurisprudence. He thinks somehow regulating ammunition wouldn't face the same legal considerations as regulating guns themselves.
And how would we limit somebody to only owning 50 rounds? I go buy a box, next week I buy another box, next week another one, meanwhile I mention to my buddy that I'm going shooting up in the hills and ask him to pick some up for me ... a bit of pre-planning, like Holmes did anyways, and I can amass more ammo than I can carry and use.Your point is well taken, though. Probably the reason gun control proponents haven't pursued serious ammunition limits is that there is little evidence they would be effective. Limiting Holmes to 50 rounds might have made a difference (his rifle could fire 70 rounds in a minute), but the number of people killed by Holmes (12) happens less than every 4 hours with "normal" gun deaths. And in the vast majority of those cases, the shooter having easy access to only 50 rounds would make no difference at all.
Well, it's more than a sport. I think I have the right to self defense. The club I belonged to had a strong youth program and we generated something like 30MM in scholarships over the years (I don't recall the exact number, but it was modest 10s of millions). This club has been in existence since the 50s, has people in it every day, competitive shooting most days, and not one person ever shot another person, accidentally or on purpose. I guess it's probably that will eventually change, so lets say 100 years of peaceful activity outlawed over one incident? That does not seem proportional to me. Guns are extremely safe compared to things like owning a private swimming pool. It's just there are a lot out there, and we are a "kill-y" nation. We blithely accept far higher rates of death (relative to frequency of use or existence).FWIW, I would not hesitate to destroy someone's sport if it could prevent a significant number of those 31000 deaths, but since the benefit is not at all likely, there's no justification for destroying your sport.
And how would we limit somebody to only owning 50 rounds? I go buy a box, next week I buy another box, next week another one, meanwhile I mention to my buddy that I'm going shooting up in the hills and ask him to pick some up for me ... a bit of pre-planning, like Holmes did anyways, and I can amass more ammo than I can carry and use.
We do?We blithely accept far higher rates of death (relative to frequency of use or existence).
First, I see no valid argument that because an institution has been around for more than 100 years that we can't pass regulations that might hurt that institution, if the regulations achieve a legitimate public interest that outweighs the individual right in question. Second, we've had an extremely high rate of gun deaths in the U.S. for a long time. And finally, I've clearly said that our regulations should not be passed with an eye to aberrant events like the Holmes shooting, but to reducing the chronic ongoing gun death rate (it works out to something like the number of people Holmes killed happening in our country every 4 hours--I think it's actually a shorter time span than that--I just did very sloppy rounding off calculations).I guess it's probably that will eventually change, so lets say 100 years of peaceful activity outlawed over one incident?
That's not intellectually honest. I think the 31,000 deaths statistic presents a legitimate and very serious public safety concern. No one's goal is to turn recreational shooters into criminals. Plenty of us would be willing to inconvenience or even destroy your sport if it would seriously reduce the incidence of gun deaths.
I accept Roger's argument that draconian limits on ammunition would only have the cost of messing up the sport without the benefit of much (if any) reduction in gun deaths.
But there's no need to attribute crazy motives to your opponents in this debate.
Much is made of the "vast supply of ammunition" the lad had accumulated, but as more responsible news outlets have noted, that's hardly an unusual amount for active competitive shooters.
I used to burn through several thousand rounds per week, myself; reloaded most of it.
How would destroying a sport* fit in with Heller:
Yep. A regulation I would support is keeping a nationwide database of gun owners and ammo purchasers. This could help law enforcement solve murders. I'm not sure it would do any good for prevention though. Maybe raising a red flag for unusual purchases like Holmes' series of purchases would trigger a visit from police just to ask what's up. I dunno.
We do?
The auto industry has accepted increasingly strict regulations to help reduce traffic fatalities. And they have drastically decreased the vehicle death rate. (Deaths per 100 million vehicle miles traveled.) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_motor_vehicle_deaths_in_U.S._by_year
ETA:
First, I see no valid argument that because an institution has been around for more than 100 years that we can't pass regulations that might hurt that institution, if the regulations achieve a legitimate public interest that outweighs the individual right in question. Second, we've had an extremely high rate of gun deaths in the U.S. for a long time. And finally, I've clearly said that our regulations should not be passed with an eye to aberrant events like the Holmes shooting, but to reducing the chronic ongoing gun death rate (it works out to something like the number of people Holmes killed happening in our country every 4 hours--I think it's actually a shorter time span than that--I just did very sloppy rounding off calculations).